The literature has shown that supervised exercise programs for patients with PAD and who report intermittent claudication (IC) have improved health outcomes, but this is not locally available. Introducing the use of a pedometer may act as a method to encourage patients to continue on their independent exercise regimen. There is very little literature which has examined the effectiveness using pedometers as a measure of compliance within this population.
It has been established that exercise therapy has a central role in the management of peripheral arterial disease. Such treatment should be comprised of intermittent walking of sufficient distance to induce significant discomfort, and be carried out over a period of at least several months. Supervised exercise training utilizing intermittent treadmill walking is a well-validated treatment for claudication. Most prospective randomized single site studies have reported significant improvement in walking distance following supervised exercise training but not with non-supervised regimens. Furthermore, this has been acknowledged in both the current AHA/ACC 'Guidelines for the management of patients with peripheral arterial disease', which recommends supervised exercise training as an initial treatment modality with a Class 1A level of evidence (highest), as well as in the TransAtlantic Intersocietal Consensus, which provides an 'A' categorical recommendation. In spite of these peer-reviewed, published recommendations, supervised exercise training remains little used, expensive, not reimbursed by Ontario Health Insurance Plan, and therefore is rarely available to patients with claudication in Ontario. The purpose of this multicentre study is to examine whether the use of a pedometer enhances patient compliance with walking as compared to usual care.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
200
The use of a pedometer will demonstrate improvement in the following health outcomes in patients with PAD by acting as a method of surveillance to improve compliance with a walking regimen
Toronto General Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
RECRUITINGIncreased walking distance
Six Minute Walk Test
Time frame: 6 months
Time to claudication
Six Minute Walk Test
Time frame: 6 Months
Quality of Life
ED5QL and the VascuQol-6 questionnaires
Time frame: 6 months
Ankle Brachial Index
Ankle Brachial Index
Time frame: 6 months
Blood Pressure
Blood Pressure
Time frame: 6 months
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